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Zmas, Aristotelis – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2015
The paper examines the transfer of the Bologna Process (BP) outside Europe, focusing on its "external dimension" and dynamics in global settings. It argues that the BP impacts on the internationalisation activities of universities, especially with regard to cross-border transparency of qualifications, transnational improvement of quality…
Descriptors: International Cooperation, Educational Cooperation, Student Mobility, Educational Philosophy
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Maiwald, Matthias; Harrington, Kathy – Australian Universities' Review, 2012
Intellectual property rights have various facets. The best-known one is copyright, enabling the owner to legally utilise intellectual materials. However, there is a separate set of legal entitlements, termed moral intellectual property rights. The purpose of these is to prevent false attribution, damage to an author's reputation and some forms of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Copyrights, Plagiarism, Instructional Materials
Group of Eight (NJ1), 2012
An effective innovation system requires productive interactions between all its parts. Within Australia there is a view that business-university interactions are suboptimal. Government has set a target for doubling the interactions between business and publicly funded researchers by 2020; and the Group of Eight has a strategic priority to build…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Partnerships in Education, Best Practices, School Business Relationship
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Coyle, Troy – Australian Universities' Review, 2009
Constrained public funding for universities and the emphasis placed on university-industry interactions mean that universities are increasingly required to compete for industrial funds for research. This in turn means that universities need to develop a customer service culture in order to be competitive and attractive to industry. Many studies…
Descriptors: Technology Transfer, Questionnaires, Research and Development, School Business Relationship
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Gribble, Cate – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2008
A consequence of the dramatic rise in international student mobility is the trend for international students to remain in the country in which they study after graduation. Countries such as Australia, the UK and Canada stand to benefit from international student migration, as they are able to fill skill shortages with locally trained foreign…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Technology Transfer, Foreign Countries, Student Mobility
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Falconer, Isobel – ALT-J: Research in Learning Technology, 2007
The slow uptake by teachers in post-compulsory education of new technological tools and technology-enhanced teaching methods may be symptomatic of a general split in the e-learning community between development of tools, services and standards, and research into how teachers can use these most effectively (i.e. between the teaching practitioner…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Foreign Countries
Canadian Council on Learning, 2006
This report aims to inform Canadians on the extent to which Canada's post-secondary education sector is contributing to Canadians' social and economic objectives, its ability to respond to a fast-changing global environment, and how Canada's approach to higher education compares with other leading developed countries. Analysis of currently…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Postsecondary Education, Educational Objectives, Labor Force Development
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Armstrong, Robert W.; Krasnostein, John – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 1995
This article notes that the homogenizing effect of technology transfer is commonly felt to be responsible for cultural and educational convergence. The role of graduate study in international business administration in this process is considered, using a survey of graduate business administration students in Australia, Malaysia, and Singapore.…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Cultural Context, Cultural Pluralism, Foreign Countries